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Anthropology of the Body and Embodiment
070: 603
Prof. Fran Mascia-Lees
[email protected]
Spring 2013
Class meeting time: 10:55am-1:55pm
Offices and Appointments:
 Office Hours: Tuesday 2-3pm in RAB 313, Douglass
 Other Appointments: If you need an appointment with me outside my office hours, please
email me, but it may have to be in my CAC office (Executive Dean’s Office, 77
Hamilton St.).
Course Description
Once the province of medical science and certain schools of philosophy, “the body” emerged in the
late 1970s as a central site from which scholars across the humanities and social sciences questioned
the ontological and epistemological basis of almost all forms of inquiry. In anthropology, “the body”
became such a central concept that by the mid-1980s, its study burgeoned into a fully formed
subfield, “the anthropology of the body.” For many anthropologists at the time, especially feminist
anthropologists, the questions of power and oppression that were on their agenda could not be
addressed without first challenging ideologies that naturalized sex, gender, and racial differences
through discourses and representations of the body that privileged some interests over others
especially within a framework of dichotomies: for example, mind/body, subject/object, male/female,
self/other, culture/nature, and civilized/primitive. At the same time, medical anthropologists,
imbricated in this same agenda in multiple ways, revealed how conceptions of the body were central
to substantive inquiries in medical anthropology and also began the work of problematizing “the
body.” Since then, “the body” has come to be understood as simultaneously subject and object,
meaningful and material, individual and social and has served as the basis of a stunningly large
number of inquiries in the discipline. It continues to be a fertile site from which anthropologists
mount refutations of abstract, universalizing models and ideologies and interrogate operations of
power and possibilities for agency and political change both theoretically and in specific ethnographic
contexts. This course simultaneously reflects this history of inquiry and covers the most current
approaches, insights, and conceptualizations of the body in anthropology and related fields,
illuminating the newest arenas in which it is being investigated, specifically the paradigmatic shift
toward questions of embodiment and interest in the senses, emotion, and affect as essential to lived
experience.
Required Books
Mascia-Lees, Frances E., ed. A Companion to the Anthropology of the Body and Embodiment.
Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. (Companion)
NOTE: I HAVE NEGOTIATED A SPECIAL PRICE FOR THIS OTHERWISE
EXPENSIVE VOLUME. YOU CAN GET A DISCOUNTED VERSION AT
http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/Section/id-815323.html
Taussig, Michael. Beauty and the Beast. University of Chicago Press, 2012.
1
Requirements
Weekly Reading Critiques and Class Discussion
60% of grade
You are required to prepare 11 weekly critiques (3 page at most!) based on the reading of
typically 7-8 articles a week. These should demonstrate your creative, critical integration and
evaluation of ideas from the reading materials. You will be expected to read your critiques in
class. Critiques will be used to facilitate our discussion of the material, so please make them
interesting and lively.
There is no one acceptable form of critique. You can, for example, synthesize all the readings
from a week into an overview of a type of approach; draw on one main idea from one reading
and assess it in terms of the other readings for that class; use the articles to counter or
elaborate on an argument, idea, or approach raised in earlier weeks; apply the week’s
approaches to a concrete object, case, context, etc. What is important is that your critique
address ideas from most, if not all, of the articles and demonstrate your critical engagement
with some of the main ideas being discussed. If you do not come prepared to class with your
critique, you will receive a grade of zero for that day.
You are expected to participate actively in the discussion of the reading material in each
class, demonstrating your knowledge of, and critical thinking about, the material covered.
Participation should go above and beyond the reading of your critique in class and should
involve careful listening and generous responses to others’ critiques and ideas.
Final Paper
40% of grade
You are required to write a research paper of at least 15, but no more than 20, pages
excluding references (12 point type, double spaced, one inch margins) on a topic of interest
related to the course. Please email me your topic and preliminary ideas by February 19,
2013. The final version of your paper is due to me electronically by 5pm on April 23, 2013.
I will not accept a late paper (no excuses, technological or otherwise). We will discuss your
papers the last day of class.
ATTENDENCE POLICY
Students are required to attend all class meetings (only one absence is allowable, and this
only with a legitimate excuse such as serious illness). If you miss more than one class, you
will jeopardize your standing in the course and may be asked to withdraw from it.
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COURSE OUTLINE
I.
APPROACHES TO THE BODY AND EMBODIMENT
Jan. 22
Introduction
overview of course, requirements, etc.
Jan. 29
Dualisms and Anthropological Bodies
Csordas, Thomas J. The Body’s Career in Anthropology. In Anthropological Theory Today,
edited by Henrietta L. Moore. Polity Press, pp. 172-205, 1999.
Descartes, Rene. Second Meditation: Of the Nature of the Human Mind; and that it is Easier to
Know than the Body. http://homepage.mac.com/jholbo/writings/meditations/second.html.
Douglas, Mary. The Two Bodies. In Natural Symbols: Explorations in Cosmology.
Pantheon Books, p. 93-112, 1970.
Jackson, Jean. Pain and Bodies. (Companion)
Latour, Bruno. Do you believe in Reality? In Beyond the Body Proper, edited by Margaret
Lock and Judith Farquhar. Duke University Press, 2007.
Martin, Emily. Mind-Body Problems. American Ethnologist 27(3):569-590, 2000.
Scheper-Hughes, Nancy and Margaret Lock. The Mindful Body: A Prolegomenon to
Future Work in Medical Anthropology. Medical Anthropology Quarterly (1)1:6–41,
1987.
Turner, Terrence. The Body beyond the Body: Social, Material and Spiritual Dimensions of
Bodiliness. (Companion)
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Feb. 5
Foucault: Disciplined/Docile Bodies and the Nature of Biopower/Biopolitics
 Bartky, Sandra. Foucault, Femininity, and the Modernization of Patriarchal Power. In
Feminism and Foucault, edited by Irene Diamond and Lee Quinby. Northeastern, pp. 61-86,
1988.
 Butler, Judith. 1989. Foucault and the Paradox of Bodily Inscriptions.
http://www.egs.edu/faculty/judith-butler/articles/foucault-and-the-paradox-of-bodilyinscriptions/
 Foucault, Michel. Part III: Discipline. In Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison.
Vintage, pp. 135-230 ONLY, 1979.
 Foucault, Michel. Body/Power. In Power/Knowledge. Pantheon, pp. 55-62, 1972.
 Horn, David. Performing Criminal Anthropology: Science, Popular Wisdom, and the Body. In
Anthropologies of Modernity: Foucault, Governmentality, and Life Politics, edited by J. X.
Inda, Blackwell, pp. 135-157, 2005.
file:///Users/fmascia/Desktop/Horn%20Anthropologies_of_Modernity_Foucault_Governmen
tality_and_Life_Politics.html
 Mascia-Lees, Fran and Pat Sharpe. The Marked and the Un(re)marked: Tattoo and Gender in
Theory and Narrative. In Tattoo, Torture, Mutilation, and Adornment. SUNY Press, 145-170,
1992.
 Rabinow, Paul and Nicholas Rose. Biopower Today. BioSocieties 1:195-217, 2006.
Feb. 12
The Semiotic Body: Writing (on/with/through) the Body
 Bordo, Susan. Anorexia Nervosa: Psychopathology as the Crystallization of Culture. In
Unbearable Weight. University of California Press, pp.139-164, 1993.
3
 Butler, Judith. “Body Inscriptions/Performative Subversions.” In Feminist Theory and the
Body, Routlegde, pp. 416-422, 1992.
 Freud, S. Fragment of Analysis of a Case of Hysteria (Dora). In The Freud Reader, W.W.
Norton, pp. 172-238, 1989.
 Hoffman, Ann G. Is Psychoanalysis a Poetics of the Body? American Imago 63(4): 395-422,
2006
 Mascia-Lees, Frances E. and Patricia Sharpe. Body as Text. In Taking a Stand in a Postfeminist
World, SUNY Press, pp. 153-166, 2000.
 Scarry, Elaine. The Structure of Torture: The Conversion of Real Pain into the Fiction of
Power. In The Body in Pain: the Making and Unmaking of the World, Oxford University
Press, pp. 27-59, 1985.
 Scheper-Hughes, Nancy. Nervosa. In Beyond the Body Proper, edited by Margaret Lock and
Judith Farquhar. Duke University Press, pp. 459-467, 2007.
Feb. 19
Techniques of the Body and Self: The French Tradition
 Bourdieu, Pierre. “Structures, Habitus, Practices.” In The Logic of Practice. Stanford
University Press, pp. 78-95, 1980.
 Foucault, M. Technologies of the Self, 1988
http://foucault.info/documents/foucault.technologiesOfSelf.en.html
 Ingold, Tim and Jo Lee Vergunst. Introduction. In Ways of Walking: Ethnography and Practice
on Foot, edited by Tim Ingold and Jo Lee Vergunst, Ashgate, pp. 1-20, 2008.
 Mauss, Marcel. Techniques of the Body. In Beyond the Body Proper, edited by Margaret Lock
and Judith Farquhar. Duke University Press, pp. 50-68, 2007.
 Warnier, Jean-Pierre. 2007. The Human Flesh. In The Pot-King: The Body and Technologies of
Power. Kononklijke Press, pp. 1-40, 2007.
 Warnier, Jean-Pierre. A Praxeological Approach to Subjectivation in a Material World.
Journal of Material Culture 6(1), 2001.
 TOPIC OF FINAL PAPER DUE TO ME ELECTRONICALLY BY 5PM
Feb. 26 Cultural/Feminist/Corporeal Phenomenologies and the Embodiment Turn in
Anthropology
 Alcoff, Linda. The Phenomenology of Racial Embodiment. In Visible Identities: Race, Gender, and
the Self. Oxford UP, pp. 179-194, 2006.
 Csordas, Thomas. Embodiment: Agency, Sexual Difference, and Illness. (Companion)
 Csordas, Thomas. Somatic Modes of Attention. Cultural Anthropology 8(2): 135-156, 1993.
 Desjarlais, Robert and C. Jason Throop. Phenomenological Approaches in Anthropology. Annual
Review of Anthropology 40:87-102, 2011.
 Grosz, Elizabeth. Lived Bodies: Phenomenology and the Flesh. In Volatile Bodies: Toward a
Corporeal Feminism, Indiana University Press, 1994.
 Howe, P. David. Sorting Bodies: Sensuous, Lived and Impaired. (Companion)
 Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. The Phenomenology of Perception. In Beyond the Body Proper,
edited by Margaret Lock and Judith Farquhar. Duke University Press, pp. 133-149, 2007.
 Young, Iris Marion. Throwing like a Girl: a Phenomenology of Feminine Body Comportment,
Motility, and Spatiality. In Throwing like a Girl, pp. 27-45, 2005.
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II.
THE SENSIBLE/SENSING BODY
March 5 Sensing the World
 Chau, Adam Yuet. Introduction: The Sensorial Production of the Social. Ethnos 73(4): 485504.
 Classen, Constance. Foundations for an Anthropology of the Senses. International Social
Science Journal 153: 401-412, 1997.
 Hirschkind, Charles. Introduction. In The Ethical Soundscape: Cassette Sermons And Islamic
Counterpublics, Columbia University Press, pp. 1-31, 2006.
 Howe, David. Polisensorality (Companion).
 Jackson, Deborah Davis. Scents of Place: The Dysplacement of a First Nations Community in
Canada. American Anthropologist, 113(4):606–618, 2011.
 Mol, Annemarie. Tasting Food: Tasting between the Laboratory and Clinic. (Companion)
 Serematakis, C. Nadia. The Memory of the Senses, Part I: Marks of the Transitory. In The
Senses Still, edited by C. Nadia Serematakis. The University of Chicago Press, pp. 1-18,
1994.
 Stoller, Paul and Cheryl Olkes. The Taste of Ethnographic Things. In The Taste of
Ethnographic Things, University of Pennsylvania Press, pp. 15-36, 1989.
March 12 Feeling the World: Affect, Emotion, Touch, and Movement
 Blackman, Lisa. 2008. Affect, Relationality and the “Problem of Personality.” Theory, Culture
and Society 25(1):23-48.
 Clough, Patricia. 2008. The Affective Turn: Political Economy, Biomedia and Bodies. Theory,
Culture and Society 25(1):1-22.
 Ghannam, Farha. Mobility, Liminality, and Embodiment in Urban Egypt. American Ethnologist
38(4):790-800, 2011.
 Mazarella, William. Affect: What is it Good For? In Enchantments of Modernity: Empire,
Nation, Globalization, edited by Saurabh Dube, Routledge, pp. 291-309, 2009.
 McDonald, Emily. Bodies-in-Motion: Experiences of Momentum in Transnational Surgery.
(Companion)
 Navaro-Yashin, Yael. Affective Spaces, Melancholic Objects. In The Make-Believe Space:
Affective Geography in a Postwar Polity. Duke, pp. 161-175, 2012.
 Paterson, Mark. Affecting Touch: Flesh and Feeling With. In The Senses of Touch: Haptics,
Affects, and Technologies, Berg, pp. 147-172, 2007.
 Pedwell Carolyn and Anne Whitehead. Affecting Feminism: Questions of Feeling in Feminist
Theory. Feminist Theory 13:115-129, 2012.
March 16-24
Spring Break
March 26 Embodied Ways of Knowing
 Downey, Greg. Seeing with a ‘sideways glance’:Visuomotor ‘knowing’ and the plasticity
of perception:
http://mq.academia.edu/GDowney/Papers/320729/Seeing_Without_Knowing_Learning_
With_the_Eyes_Visuomotor_Knowingand_the_Plasticity_of_Perception
 Geurts, Kathryn. Is there a Sixth Sense? and Toward an Understanding of Anlo Ways of
Being in the World. In Culture and the Senses: Bodily Ways of Knowing in an African
Community, University of California Press, pp. 3-20 and 11-143, 2002.
 Kidron, Carol A. Embodied Legacies of Genocide. (Companion)
5
 Lancaster, Roger. When I was a Girl: Notes on Contrivance. (Companion)
 Marchand, Trevor. Muscles, Morals, and Mind. British Journal of Educational Studies
56(3):245-271, 2008.
 Myers, Natasha and Joe Dumit. Haptic Creativity and the Mid-embodiments of
Experimental Life. (Companion)
 Okely, Judith. Fieldwork Embodied. Sociological Review, 55(s1):65-79, 2007.
 Wilson, Elizabeth. The Brain in the Gut. In Psychosomatic: Feminism and the Neurological
Body, pp. 31-48.
Fanon (is in dialogue with M-P in “The Lived Experience of the Black”
III.
COMMODIFIED, AESTHETICIZED, MEDICALIZED, AND VULNERABLE
BODIES
April 2
Colonial/Capitalist Productions of the Body
 Boddy, Janice. Bodies under Colonialism. (Companion)
 Freeman, Carla. Embodying and Affecting Neoliberalism. (Companion).
 Marx, Karl and Friedrich Engels. Opposition of the Materialist and Idealist Outlook. In Beyond
the Body Proper, edited by Margaret Lock and Judith Farquhar. Duke University Press, pp.
113-129, 2007.
 Willis, Susan. Work(ing) Out. In A Primer for Daily Life. Routledge, pp. 62-85, 1991.
 Comaroff, John and Jean. Bodily Reform as Historical Practice. In Ethnography and the
Historical Imagaination. Westview, pp. , 69-94, 1992.
 Ramos-Zayas, Ana Yolanda. Learning Affect/Embodying Race (Companion)
 Fassin, Didier. To Do Races With Bodies. (Companion)
 Stoler, Ann Laura. Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power: Gender and Morality in the Making
of Race. In Carnal Knowledge and Imperial Power, University of California Press, pp. 41-78,
2002.
April 9 Bodies and Aesthetics
 Edmonds, Alexander. “The Poor have the Right to be Beautiful”: Cosmetic Surgery in
Neoliberal Brazil. Journal of The Royal Anthropological Institute. 13(2): 363-381, 2007.
 Gilman, Sander. The Racial Nose. In Making the Body Beautiful: A Cultural History of
Aesthetic Surgery. Princeton University Press, pp. 85-118, 1999.
 Linke, Uli. White Skin/Aryan Aesthetics. In German Bodies: Race and Representation after
Hitler. Routledge, 27-114, 1999.
 Mascia-Lees, Frances E. Aesthetic Embodiment and Commodity Culture. (Companion)
 Taussig, Michael. Beauty and the Beast. University of Chicago Press, 2012.
April 16
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Bodies of Science, Biomedicine, Technology
Boellstorff, Tom. Placing the Virtual Body: Avatar, Chora, Cypherg. (Companion)
Wentzell, Emily and Marcia Inhorn. The Male Reproductive Body. (Companion).
Jones, Nora. Embodied Ethics: From the Body as Specimen and Spectacle to the Body as
Patient. (Companion)
6
 Lock, Margaret. Embodying Molecular Genomics. (Companion)
 Morgan, Lynn. Fetal Bodies, Undone. (Companion)
 Sobchack, Vivien. A Leg to Stand On: Prosthetics, Metaphor and Materiality. In Carnal
Thoughts, California UP, pp. 205-225, 2004.
 Sharp, Lesley. Hybrid Bodies of the Scientific Imaginary. (Companion)
 Yates-Doerr, Emily. Bodily Betrayal: Love and Anger in the Time of Epigenetics.
(Companion)
April 23 Suffering, Dying, and Dead Bodies
 Auyero, Javier and Debrah Swistun. Introduction. In Flammable: Environmental Suffering in
an Argentine Shantytown, Oxford UP, pp. 1-20, 2009.
 Bakare-Yusel, Bibi. The Economy of Violence: Black Bodies and the Unspeakable Terror.
In Feminist Theory and the Body, edited by Janet Price and Margrit Shildrick. Routledge,
pp. 311-323, 1999.
 Biehl, J. Life of the Mind. American Ethnologist 31( 4): 475-496, 2004.
 Daniel, Valentine E. The Individual in Terror. In Embodiment and Experience: the Existential
Ground of Culture, edited by Thomas J. Csordas. Cambridge UP, pp. 229-247, 1994.
 Magaña, Rocio. The Deadly Display of Border Politics. (Companion)
 Rouse, Carolyn. If She’s a Vegetable, We’ll be her Garden: Embodiment, Transcendence and
Citations of Competing Cultural Metaphors in the Case of a Dying Child. American
Ethnologist 31(4): 514-529, 2004.
 Scheper-Hughes, Nancy. Body in Tatters: Dismemberment, Dissection, and the Return of the
Repressed. (Companion)
 Williams, Simon. Vulnerable/Dangerous Bodies? The Trials and Tribulations of Sleep.
Sociological Review. 55(s1):142-155, 2007.
 No critique due
 FINAL PAPER DUE TO ME ELECTRONICALLY BY 5PM
Apr. 30 Discussion of Final Papers
7